The former Nazi dictator lived in a Munich home owned by a Jewish merchant, and apparently treated him with respect

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Adolf Hitler had a Jewish landlord and treated him “with courtesy,” a German historian says.

Hitler lived in a home in Munich that was owned by a Jewish merchant between the years 1920 and 1929, according to Paul Hoser. Hitler spent one of those years in Landsberg prison for his and his Nazi Party’s failed coup attempt in 1923 in Munich known as the Beer Hall Putsch.

Hoser, in a quarterly journal issued by the Institute for Contemporary History, known as VfZ, identified the landlord as Hugo Erlanger. He also said Hitler treated his landlord “with courtesy,” The Associated Press reported, citing a Der Spiegel magazine story on the research.

According to Hoser’s research, Erlanger lost the house in 1934 after falling behind on mortgage payments, but recovered it in 1949 after surviving World War II.